2 Notice The information in this document is subject to change without notice and shall not be construed as a commitment on the part of Connect One. Connect One assumes no liability for any errors that might appear in this document. The software described in this document is furnished under a license agreement and may be used or copied only in accordance with the terms of such a license agreement. It is forbidden by law to copy the software on any medium except as specifically allowed in the license agreement. No part of this document may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including but not limited to photocopying, recording, transmitting via fax and/or modem devices, scanning, and/or information storage and retrieval systems for any purpose without the express written consent of Connect One. ichip, ichip LAN, Socket ichip, Embedded imodem, Internet Controller, ilan-100 ilan, iwifi, iconnector, iconnectorle, imodem, Nano WiReach, Nano LANReach, II-EVB, AT+i, Instant Internet and Connect One are trademarks of Connect One Ltd. Copyright Connect One Ltd. All rights reserved. Page 2 of 70

5 Preface Target Audience This document is intended for users of Connect One products who need to know how to configure the products' firmware and parameters with the ichipconfig Windows based GUI. Related Documents AT+i Programmer s Manual Page 5 of 70

6 1 Introduction ichip Config Utility Overview System Requirements ichipconfig Utility Menus ichip Config Utility Functionality 1.1 ichip Config Utility Overview The ichip Config Utility, combined with any of Connect One s products, enables quick and full configuration of the ichip, serial-based and web-based updating of firmware, and packaging of a website and parameters file. Connect One s ichip Internet Controller is an Internet peripheral chip that offloads Internet connectivity tasks from a host processor. The host processor communicates with the ichip via Connect One s high-level AT+i command set. The ichip Config utility enables you to configure and use the ichip without any need to know or use the AT+i commands either for evaluation purposes or for updating your existing configuration. The AT+i commands are translated through the user-friendly GUI. All you need to do is define the parameters as described in each section of this manual. 1.2 System Requirements To work with the ichip Config Utility, you need the following: A PC with a free RS232 COM port A device/board/module using the ichip you want to configure An RS232 cable Windows XP operating system 1.3 Quick Tour of the ichip Config Utility ichipconfig Utility Menus The ichipconfig utility uses the following menus (Figure 1): Figure 1: ichipconfig Utility Main Menu Bar File: Enables you to load an RPF file (a file including configuration parameters) or exit the program. Tools: The Tools menu lists the same options as the icons displayed in the ichip Configuration Tools (Main) window, and more. Wizards: Provides access to the Communication Platform Wizard and the SerialNET Configuration Wizard. Host <-> ichip Options: Enables you to configure the connection mode between the host and ichip either via COM port or socket. Page 6 of 70

7 Serial Ports: Opens the Serial Settings window, where you can change the COM port on the PC and the PC s COM port baud rate. SerialNET: Enables you to enter and exit SerialNET mode ichip Config Utility Functionality ichipconfig utility provides you with the following tools: Quick Configuration Full Configuration Firmware Update Web Parameters Update (ichip Uploader via Serial) ichip Website Uploader via HTTP Dumb Terminal Send attachment Receive s Get URL Change ichip communication platform Every ichip has its own set of features and parameters. You only have access to the features applicable to your product. For example, when configuring an ichip with only LAN support, parameters relating to dial-up and wireless modem are grayed out. Page 7 of 70

11 2.2 Accessing ichipconfig Utility Tools This procedure describes how to open the ichipconfig Utility, set the correct baud rate, and use the utility to configure or send information to the ichip. What you need: Device or module using Connect One ichip or Connect One II-EVB board, connected to an RS232 COM port or USB port on your workstation, with power on. How: 1. From the Start menu, select Programs > ConnectOne > ichipconfig. The ichip Configuration Tools window appears. Figure 8: ichip Configuration Tools Window 2. Click the icon of the tool you want to use. The first time ichipconfig is invoked, it attempts to locate the ichip connected to the PC s COM port at the default baud rate of If the utility finds the chip, the tool window for the selected function appears. Continue with the relevant procedure for the tool (see Chapter 3, Working with ichipconfig). If the utility cannot find the ichip, the Serial Settings window appears. Page 11 of 70

12 Figure 9: Serial Settings Window 3. From the Serial Port dropdown list, select the COM port on the PC to which the ichip is connected. 4. From the Baud Rate dropdown list, select the baud rate used by the ichip. If you do not know the baud rate, select Scan. If Scan is selected, ichipconfig runs through the various baud rates until it finds the correct one. If the ichipconfig utility still fails to find ichip, make sure that an open application like Palm HotSync is not holding the port, or switch to a different COM port on the PC and scan again. After ichipconfig finds the baud rate, you can easily change the baud rate by clicking Serial Ports on the main page menu bar and selecting the desired baud rate. Page 12 of 70

13 3 Working with ichipconfig ichipconfig Tools Overview Quick Configuration Full Configuration Tool Working with the ichip Uploader (via Serial) Tool Working with the Site Packer Tool Working with the ichip Uploader (via HTTP) Tool Working with the Dumb Terminal 3.1 ichipconfig Tools Overview ichipconfig utility provides you with several tools that enable you to configure various parameters on your ichip. Depending on the ichip model you are connected to and the ichip firmware version you use, only the relevant parameters and sections are available. Others are grayed out, and cannot be configured. 3.2 Quick Configuration Quick Configuration Tool Overview The Quick Configuration tool enables you to configure only the essential AT+i parameters required to send and retrieve an . This is a good way to make sure that the ichip is operational on the LAN side, or that it is configured correctly to work with your ISP. Quick Configuration parameters, like all AT+i parameters, are stored in memory (either internal or external) and therefore need to be defined only once Working with the Quick Configuration Tool This procedure describes how to use the Quick Configuration tool to configure only those AT+i parameters required to send and retrieve . How: Additional mail configuration and manipulation parameters are available using the Full Configuration tool, as described in Section In the ichip Configuration Tools window, click the Quick Configuration icon. If you are using ichip or II-EVB, the <product> Quick Configuration window appears (Figure 10). Page 13 of 70

14 Figure 10: ichip Quick Configuration Window 2. Do the following: To configure ichip modem parameters: a. In the ISP Telephone Number field, type your ISP telephone number. Make sure you include any number required for access to an outside line. For example, if you must dial 9 to get an outside line, type 9,xxx-xxxx, where xxx-xxxx is your ISP number. If required, include the area code as well. b. In the Username field, type the username of the ISP account. c. In the Password field, type the password for the ISP account. d. Select the Blind Dial checkbox to instruct modem to dial out without waiting for a dialtone (for example, in a cellular modem environment) To configure ichip LAN parameters: a. Determine whether you are working with a DHCP server, or in fixed IP address mode. b. To work in DHCP mode: Select the Use DHCP checkbox: Sets the values of the Default IP Address, Subnet, and Gateway fields to and disables these fields for input. To work in fixed IP address mode: Page 14 of 70

15 a. Make sure the Use DHCP checkbox is clear. b. In the Default IP Address field, type the IP address for the ichip. c. In the Subnet field, type the subnet address for your network. d. In the Gateway field, type your gateway address. e. Select the Use IP Finder checkbox to use the Connect One utility that finds ichip IP addresses on the network and activates the ichip Web server, enabling remote configuration of ichip through a browser. The MAC Address and Assigned IP Address fields are filled automatically, and cannot be modified. 3. To configure ichip General parameters: For sending a. In the SMTP Server field, type the name (string) or IP address of the SMTP server you use to send s. b. In the Destination Address field, type the address to which you want to send an . c. In the Return Address field, type the account to which replies should be sent. For receiving a. In the POP3 Server field, type the name (string) or IP address of the POP3 server you use to receive s. b. In the Mailbox field, type the address at which you want to receive s. c. In the Mailbox Password field, type the password for the address, if one is required. 4. Click Save. A dialog box appears, indicating the parameters are saved (Figure 11). 5. Click OK. Figure 11: Parameters Saved Successfully Dialog Box The Quick Configuration window closes, and the ichip Configuration Tools window appears. Page 15 of 70

16 3.3 Full Configuration Tool Accessing the Full Configuration Tool This procedure describes how to access configuration tabs for all the possible ichip parameters, using the Full Configuration tool. What you need: Device or module using Connect One ichip or Connect One II-EVB board connected to your workstation, with power on How: 1. In the ichip Configuration Tools window, click the Full Configuration icon. The Configuration Tools window appears (Figure 12). Figure 12: Full Configuration Window 2. The Configuration Tools window displays the tabs that enable you to configure various aspects of ichip functionality. 3. Click the tab you want to configure Configuring the Format Tab This procedure describes how to configure parameters for format, properties, and sending and receiving s. Page 16 of 70

17 What you need: Access to Configuration Tools window, as described in Section How: 1. In the Configuration Tools window, click the Format tab. The Format tab configuration fields are displayed (Figure 13). Figure 13: Format Tab of Full Configuration Tool 2. To retrieve headers together with the body, select the Transmit Headers (XFH) checkbox. 3. In the Limit Number of Headers (HDL) field, type the maximum number of header lines for the host to retrieve (leaving the field blank, or typing 0, configures the default value that enables retrieval of all sent headers). 4. In the Filter String (FLS) field, type a string (word or phrase, ASCII format) by which to filter s retrieved from the server. ichip only retrieves s containing the defined string in the header lines. 5. In the Subject (SBJ) field, type the word(s) you want to appear in the subject line of the In the Address (TOA) field, type the address to which you want to send an To define a mailing list of up to 50 addresses, click 50 Addressee. The 50 Addressee window appears (Figure 14). Page 17 of 70

18 Figure 14: 50 Addressee Window Type the addresses in the Address column, and then click OK. The mailing list is saved. 8. In the Address Description field, type the name of the person to whom you are sending an In the Return Address (REA) field, type the address to which the recipient should reply. 10. In the Sender Description (FRM) field, type the name of the sender of the . Example scenario: If you want the ichip to send an from the device to a person monitoring data collected by the device (say, Person1), you might type Person1 s in the Address field and then type Person1 in the Address Description field. If, in this scenario, you want replies to the sent to you, you would type your address in the Return Address field In the Sender Description field, you might type the name of the device collecting the data. 11. If you want to send copies of the s sent from the ichip, in the Alternate Addressee fields (CC1-CC4), type the addresses to CC. 12. In the Message Body (BDY) field, type a message to appear in the body of the From the Media Type (MT) dropdown list, select the media type to use when sending an (audio, video, application, or text). Page 18 of 70

19 14. In the Media Subtype String (MST) field, type the name of the media subtype of the attachment. 15. In the Attachment File Name (FN) field, type the attachment filename, including the extension. For example, filename.jpg. 16. Do one of the following: To apply the defined parameters and continue working in the Configuration Tools window, click Apply. To save the defined parameters and exit the Configuration Tools window, click Save. Your definitions are saved, the Configuration Tools window closes, and the ichip Configuration Tools window appears Configuring the Server Profiles Tab This procedure describes how to configure parameters for incoming and outgoing mail servers and mailbox settings. What you need: Access to the Configuration Tools window, as described in Section How: 1. In the Configuration Tools window, click the Server Profiles tab. The Server Profiles tab configuration fields are displayed (Figure 15). Figure 15: Sever Profiles Tab of Full Configuration Tool Page 19 of 70

20 2. To keep a copy of retrieved s on the server, select the Leave copy on server checkbox. If the checkbox is not selected, retrieved s are deleted. 3. In the Primary Domain Name Server (DNS1) and the Secondary Domain Name Server (DNS2) fields, type the IP addresses of the DNS servers you want to use to resolve logical server names into IP addresses (for working in LAN mode, with a fixed IP address). If you are working in DHCP mode, or using IP addresses and not logical names, leave these fields blank. On ichip Plus, DNS1, DNS2, SMTP and POP3 have two sets of parameters: one for the current communication platform and one for the inactive communication platform. In Figure 15 ichip Plus is configured to use the dialup communication platform, so the inactive communication platform should be defined with the LAN values for DNS1 and DNS2. 4. In the Outgoing Mail Server (SMTP) field, type the name or IP address of the outgoing SMTP mail server. 5. In the Incoming Mail Server (POP3) field, type the name or IP address of the incoming POP3 mail server. 6. In the Mailbox User Name (MBX) and Mailbox Password (MPWD) fields, type the username and password you use to access the mailbox. 7. If you specify an SMTP server that requires user authentication in the Outgoing Mail Server (SMTP) field, you need to select the SMTP Authentication (SMA) checkbox, and enter appropriate strings in the User Name (SMU) and Password (SMP) fields. 8. In the DHCP Server Pool Size (DPSZ) field, enter an integer between 1 and 255 to activate ichip s internal DHCP server and set the number of IP addresses to be allocated in its IP pool. In addition, enter an integer between 0 and to define the lease time, in minutes, to be granted by ichip s DHCP server when assigning IP addresses to clients. A lease time value of 0 means indefinite lease. 9. In the Ping Polling Frequency (PFR) field, type a value defining the time interval (in seconds) at which ichip issues PING requests to one of the PING destination servers. 10. In the Ping Destination 1 and Ping Destination 2 fields (PDS1 and PDS2), type the names or IP addresses of the primary and secondary PING destination servers. 11. Do one of the following: To apply the defined parameters and continue working in the Configuration Tools window, click Apply. To save the defined parameters and exit the Configuration Tools window, click Save. Your definitions are saved, the Configuration Tools window closes, and the ichip Configuration Tools window appears Configuring the Operational Parameters Tab This procedure describes how to configure parameters for general operations. What you need: Access to the Configuration Tools window, as described in Section Page 20 of 70

21 How: 1. In the Configuration Tools window, click the Operational Parameters tab. The Operational Parameters tab configuration fields are displayed (Figure 16). Figure 16: Operational Parameters Tab of Full Configuration Tool 2. (For use with modem operation only) from the Extended Return Code (XRC) dropdown list, select a value to determine the message/response mode in particular, to activate or deactivate blind dial mode. (If you select 0 Blind Dial from the dropdown list, make sure the Blind Dial checkbox is also selected). XRC is identical to ATXn and is applicable only for modem operation or II- EVB in imodem mode. For more detailed information on the ATXn modes, refer to an AT Command Set reference source. 3. In the Modem Initialization String (MIS) field, type the string that initializes the modem (refer to your modem s user manual for more information). 4. From the Modem Type Designator (MTYP) dropdown list, select the modem type to use with the ichip. Sets ichip to support a specific modem type. Analog modems, SiLabs Si2400 ISOmodem, GSM, GPRS, CDMA, TDMA, CDPD, iden and AMPS wireless modems are supported. 5. Select the Suppress ATZ checkbox to prohibit ichip from issuing an ATZ command to the modem before dialing the ISP when an Internet session is activated (ATZ is a standard modem AT command, which resets the modem status. Suppressing ATZ might be useful if you need to manually initialize your modem). 6. In the Wait Time Constant (WTC) field, type a value (in seconds) that the ichip waits for an answer, as defined in the modem S7 register. Page 21 of 70

22 7. In the TCP Timeout (TTO) field, type a value (in seconds) that defines the time ichip waits for an Internet transaction to complete before returning a timeout error. 8. In the Inactivity Timeout (IATO) filed, type a value (in seconds) that defines how long ichip waits from the last activity before ending the session (SerialNET for ichip LAN, disconnecting the line for ichip Dial-Up). 9. (For CDPD modems only): In the CDPD Password (CPWD) field, type the password for access to the modem. 10. From the Max Packet Size (MPS) dropdown list, select the limit for outgoing PPP packets in a dialup environment. The MPS upper limit is the ichip maximum transmission unit (MTU). 11. From the Host Interface (HIF) dropdown list, select the Interface over which the Host processor will send AT+i commands. (0 is Autodetect, meaning that ichip will determine the Host interface as the interface where the first AT+I command is received). 12. From the Bridge Mode (BRM) dropdown list, select the required LAN-to-WiFi Bridge mode. Specify 0 when this mode is disabled. 13. From the Baud Rate (BDRM) dropdown list, select a value to set the baud rate at which the ichip communicates with the modem. 14. From the Fixed Baud Rate (BDRF) dropdown list, select a value to set the baud rate at which the modem communicates with the host. 15. From the Flow Control (FLW) dropdown list, select a flow control value (No Flow Control, ichip to Host Hardware Flow Control, ichip to Modem Hardware Flow Control, or ichip to Modem and Host Hardware Flow Control). 16. Select the Disable Reflection checkbox to disable reflection of hardware flow control signals (CTS, RTS, DTR, and DSR signal are mirrored across the ichip/ichip plus by default). 17. From the Dial Mode (DMD) dropdown list, select either Pulse or Tone dialing. 18. From the Activate Web Server (AWS) dropdown list, select a value to set automatic ichip Web server activation. Choose from the following: Disabled: Default value. Disables automatic Web server invocation. Enable Backlog n: Web server is automatically activated when ichip goes online in SerialNET mode, or as a result of a triggered Internet session. n = the maximum number of concurrent browser connections. 19. From the Triggered Up (TUP) dropdown list, select a value for Internet session initiation mode (mostly applicable for work with a modem). Select from the following: Disabled: Disables ichip from initiating a triggered Internet session. Enabled: Sets ichip to initiate Internet sessions in response to a defined trigger (such as a RING signal detected on a modem). Always Online: Sets ichip to remain online continually, without any trigger to initiate the session. 20. From the Modem Interface (MIF) dropdown list, select the Interface over which the ichip will connect to a dialup or cellular modem. Page 22 of 70

23 21. In the A2D detect threshold (ADCL) field specify the A/D level [0..255], which is the center of the A/D hysteresis window. 22. In the A2D detect period interval (ADCT) field specify the time interval in milliseconds between A/D quieries. 23. In the A2D detect threshold delta (ADCD) field specify the A/D hysteresis window size, defined as ADCL+/-[ADCD]. 24. In the A2D detect GPIO pin field specify the pin that will be toggled when the A/D level crosses the hysteresis window. Specify 0 to disable signaling. A value of [1..6] corresponds to pins PIOC[0..5]. The signal will be set HIGH when when crossing over to ADCL+ADCD and set LOW when crossing below ADCL-ADCD. 25. In the SPI Control Signal (SPIP) field specify the pin number that ichip will use to control the SPI flow direction. Specify 0 to disable. A value of [1..6] corresponds to pins PIOC[0..5]. 26. In the MAC Filter (MACF) field, specify a MAC address to enforce filtering out of any packets that are not from this MAC address in LAN-to-WiFi Bridge modes BRM=1 or 3. Leave this field empty to disable MAC filtering. 27. Select the Network Time-of-Day (NTOD) checkbox to enable ichip to set the time according to a network time-of-day server. 28. In the Network Time Server fields (NTS1 and NTS2), type the name or IP address of the primary and secondary (optional) network time server. 29. In the Greenwich Mean Time Offset (GMTO) field, type the difference in time (in hours) between the ichip location and GMT. For example, if the ichip location is one hour ahead of GMT, type 1. If the ichip location is one hour behind GMT, type In the Daylight Saving Time Definition (DSTD) field, enter a Daylight Savings Time transition rule. This rule must contain start and end dates for DST. 31. Select the IP Prot. Don t Fragment Bit (DF) checkbox to disable bit fragmenting in outgoing IP packets. 32. To enable sending remote AT+i commands to the ichip, in the AT+i Socket Server (LATI) field, type the name/number of the listening COM port. When the ichip is connected to the Internet, it opens a TCP/IP listen socket on the local IP address and specified port that can receive remote AT+i commands. 33. In the Host Name (HSTN) field, type the ichip network host name, or a unique identifying name for a LAN or dialup environment. 34. In the Baud Rate Divider (BDRD) field specify a value of [1..255]. This will be used to define the Host interface baud rate as [3M / BDRD], when one of the COM ports is used as the Host interface. 35. From the Framing Mode (FMOD) dropdown list, select the Framing Disabled (0) or Enabled (1). 36. From the PPP ACFC negotiation (PPP) dropdown list, select the ACFC negotiation mode appropriate for the PPP protocol being used. 37. Select the Auto Router Start (ARS) checkbox, to specify that ichip should automatically Power-up into irouter mode. This flag should not be specified when the BRM parameter specifies Bridge mode. 38. Select the Calculate Checksum (CKSM) checkbox to instruct ichip to calculate the checksum of Send and Receive (Write and Read) commands. If a checksum error is encountered, the data is retransmitted. Page 23 of 70

24 39. In the Timeout to Resend PING Request (PGT) field, type a value (in seconds) to set the time interval after which ichip reissues an unanswered PING request. 40. In the Timeout to Resend Unacked TCP Packet (TTR) field, type a value (in seconds) to set the time interval after which ichip retransmits an unacknowledged TCP packet over PPP connection. 41. From the Select Pin 44 Function (PN44) dropdown list, select one of the following: Clock Out: To set Pin 44 to provide a clock signal at the same frequency as ichip s clock input signal (X1 Pin 42). Heartbeat: ichip outputs a square wave (frequency ~80mSec with a 50% duty cycle). 42. From the Watchdog Activation Mode (WDM) dropdown list, select either Disabled (default) or Enabled (activates FW monitoring if a problem is encountered, a hard reset takes place). 43. In the Readiness Report HW (RRHW) field, specify which of ichip s generalpurpose I/O pins (GPIO) will be asserted Low to indicate ichip readiness to the host. Specify 0 to disable. A value of [1..6] corresponds to pins PIOC[0..5]. 44. In the Content Type (CTT) field, specify the content of the Content-type: field that is sent in the POST request. This field specifies the type of the data/file being sent. When left empty a default value of application/x-www-formurlencoded will be used, and the server will expect the data to be the data sent in a Submit of a form. 45. From the LAN Type (LTYP) dropdown list, select the prefered LAN when the ichip is connected both to an Ethernet and WiFi LAN. When set to its default (0), ichip shall automatically detect the LAN platform and if both exist, ichip will prefer the WiFi. 46. In the Web site Logo (LOGO) field, specify the filename of a *.GIF file the contains an alternate Logo image to be displayed in ichip s Configuration site. The default value specifies Connect One s Logo image. 47. Select the Set Power Save Mode (PSE) checkbox to enable the power save mode, in which ichip automatically shuts down most of its circuits after a period of n seconds without any activity on the host or modem serial ports. Renewed activity on the serial ports restores ichip to full operational mode. 48. In the Service Disable Mask (SDM) area: Select the PING Reply checkbox to prohibit ichip from responding to PING requests (this can protect against PING attacks). Select Remote Debug checkbox to disable the remote debugging feature. Select the Unauth. Web Server checkbox to prohibit unauthenticated viewing of the ichip internal website. Select Disable SNET Escape with +++ to prohibit exiting SerialNET mode when the +++ Escape sequence is detected. Select Disable Break Reset to support use of the Break signal for exiting SerialNET. Deselect this flag to use Break to reset ichip and reboot into SerialNET mode. Select Disable Internal Config Site to prohibit browsing to ichip s internal Configuration Web site. Page 24 of 70

MODEL ATC-2000 TCP/IP TO RS-232/422/485 CONVERTER User s Manual 1.1 Introduction The ATC-2000 is a RS232/RS485 to TCP/IP converter integrated with a robust system and network management features designed

1 Purpose This Technical Note describes how to set up a remote collaboration. A remote collaboration consists in configuring, programming or monitoring a PLC from a remote location, without the need of

Networking General networking Networking overview A network is a collection of devices such as computers, printers, Ethernet hubs, wireless access points, and routers connected together for communication

MODEL ATC-2004 TCP/IP TO RS-232/422/485 CONVERTER User s Manual 1.1 Introduction The ATC-2004 is a 4 Port RS232/RS485 to TCP/IP converter integrated with a robust system and network management features

USER GUIDE Cisco Small Business WBPN Wireless-N Bridge for Phone Adapters December 2011 Cisco and the Cisco Logo are trademarks of Cisco Systems, Inc. and/or its affiliates in the U.S. and other countries.

Chapter 6 Using Network Monitoring Tools This chapter describes how to use the maintenance features of your RangeMax Wireless-N Gigabit Router WNR3500. You can access these features by selecting the items

Chapter 7 Using Network Monitoring Tools This chapter describes how to use the maintenance features of your RangeMax NEXT Wireless Router WNR854T. These features can be found by clicking on the Maintenance

User Manual Onsight Management Suite Version 5.1 Another Innovation by Librestream Doc #: 400075-06 May 2012 Information in this document is subject to change without notice. Reproduction in any manner

Chapter 6 Using Network Monitoring Tools This chapter describes how to use the maintenance features of your RangeMax Dual Band Wireless-N Router WNDR3300. You can access these features by selecting the

ECE/CS 4984: Wireless Networks and Mobile Systems Pre-lab and In-class Laboratory Exercise 10 (L10) Part I Objectives and Lab Materials Objective The objectives of this lab are to: Familiarize students

Start Here Follow these instructions to set up your router. Verify That Basic Requirements Are Met Assure that the following requirements are met: You have your broadband Internet service settings handy.

Introduction En Configuring the WT-4 for ftp (Infrastructure Mode) This document provides basic instructions on configuring the WT-4 wireless transmitter and a ftp server for transmission over an infrastructure

USER GUIDE Wireless-G Broadband Router Model No: WRT54G About This Guide About This Guide Icon Descriptions While reading through the User Guide you may see various icons that call attention to specific

Guideline for setting up a functional VPN Why do I want a VPN? VPN by definition creates a private, trusted network across an untrusted medium. It allows you to connect offices and people from around the

Network Connections and Wireless Security This chapter explains how to use your Wireless Adapter to connect to your Wireless Local Area Network (WLAN) and how to set up wireless security for the Wireless

USER GUIDE Model: WRT54GL About This Guide About This Guide Icon Descriptions While reading through the User Guide you may see various icons that call attention to specific items. Below is a description

SOHO 6 Wireless Installation Procedure Windows 95/98/ME with Internet Explorer 5.x & 6.0 Before You Begin Before you install the SOHO 6 Wireless, you must have: A computer with a 10/100BaseT Ethernet card

Ethernet Port Quick Start Manual THIS MANUAL CONTAINS TECHNICAL INFORMATION FOR THE ETHERNET PORT OF EDI SIGNAL MONITORS with Ethernet Version 1.5 firmware. DETAILS OF THE ECCOM OPERATION ARE DESCRIBED

AUG: 003 Rev.: 1.0 How To GPRS Contents: This guide will explain how to set up the Internet connection of your ewon for the Talk2M connection. Table of Contents 1. Hardware and software requirements...

Version 17.12 Last Updated: August 2012 2012 Verizon. All Rights Reserved. The Verizon names and logos and all other names, logos, and slogans identifying Verizon s products and services are trademarks

Chapter 1 Configuring Internet Connectivity This chapter describes the settings for your Internet connection and your wireless local area network (LAN) connection. When you perform the initial configuration

Chapter 7 Troubleshooting This chapter provides information about troubleshooting your Wireless-G Router Model WGR614v9. After each problem description, instructions are provided to help you diagnose and

Andover Continuum Remote Communication Configuration Guide 2010, Schneider Electric All Rights Reserved No part of this publication may be reproduced, read or stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted,

Debugging Network Communications Situation: you have a computer and your NetBurner device on a network, but you cannot communicate between the two. This application note provides a set of debugging steps

Application Note Configuring SSL VPN on the Cisco ISA500 Security Appliance This application note describes how to configure SSL VPN on the Cisco ISA500 security appliance. This document includes these

USER GUIDE Model: WAP54G About This Guide About This Guide Icon Descriptions While reading through the User Guide you may see various icons that call attention to specific items. Below is a description

CONTENTS 1. Outline of how to use.1 2. How to setup each step...1 2.1 Connect your IP Camera to the LAN..1 2.2 Install the following software before view video.....2 2.3 Basic configuration setting...2

The PostBase Connectivity Wizard The PostBase Connectivity Wizard allows you to easily set up your PostBase postage machine to suit your organization s arrangements. This document will guide you through

To ensure the functioning of the site, we use cookies. We share information about your activities on the site with our partners and Google partners: social networks and companies engaged in advertising and web analytics. For more information, see the Privacy Policy and Google Privacy &amp Terms.
Your consent to our cookies if you continue to use this website.